General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Millennials don't want to be coddled, they want jobs! [View all]AlexSatan
(535 posts)We see it all of the time.
My son was on that path so i told him we were not going to help him with college. He hadn't really tried during high school and I told him that, after graduation, if he was not in college, he had 3 months to get out. All of a sudden he realized he was going to have to take responsibility for his life, looked into what degrees were and were expected to be in demand over the next decade. He got a job at minimum and saved all summer and has been paying for his education. He really pulled his life together and is on a good track.
On the other hand, his two friends are going to college (one private and one public) with their parents paying for it. One is failing Econ for the second time but insists he is going to start a business and hire my son right away. The other is scraping by with barely a 2.0 but doesn't care because he is focusing on socializing.
Other examples: waitress at local diner--started majoring in Geology, switched to Communications and is almost finished but has no idea what kind of job she can get with it. Waiter at local Texas Roadhouse-- majoring in business (about to graduate) but has no idea what jobs that will get him. Waitress at local Champps-3rd year as communications major--has mo idea what kind of job she can get.
Why spend all of that money (unless you are rich and can afford to just blow it) on a degree that you have no idea where it can lead you?
I'll try to find the chart, but in the past 25 years, the most popular academic majors have changed. Engineering, computer science, and other sciences has been declining while degrees like communications have been rising. Think that might have anything to do with the decrease in jobs in the graduate's field?